SUAL,
Pangasinan – Officials here led by Mayor Roberto Arcinue share the view that
construction of more power plants is the most effective way of providing
cheaper electricity and preventing another power crisis as what happened in the
past.
They
made the observation after noting that another multi-national company is
planning to put up a 1,000-megawatt coal-fired power plant in this thriving
town.
This first class municipality already
hosts Team Energy’s 1,200-MW Sual power station, the country’s biggest
coal-fired power plant, located in Barangay Pangascasan, Sual ,which began operation
in 1999.
“Our population is growing and we need an additional plant to serve the
people of Luzon, North Luzon, and Metro Manila,” Arcinue said.
Power rates in the Philippines are the third
highest in Asia and fourth in the Asia-Pacific region, said a survey done
by the International Energy Consultants (IEC), an Australia-based consulting
firm specializing in Asian power markets.
The
Philippines’s power rates are also the 16th highest in the world.
The Philippines’ power generation capacity is low, with
total primary energy supply per person per year of only 0.44 tons of oil.
With this situation, officials of here welcome the
possible entry of another coal power plant the way President Duterte welcomed
the construction of 135-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Iloilo province in
November last year, and the 405-megawatt coal power plant in Misamis Oriental
in September 2016.
Arcinue
echoed what then Davao City Mayor Duterte said when he campaigned for the presidency that he saw
nothing wrong with the government’s plan to put up new coal-fired power plants
to boost power supply in the country.
“You open the Philippines for all power players,
I guarantee you that electricity will become cheaper,” Duterte said during the
second presidential debate at the University of the Philippines Cebu.
Serving
now as the country’s chief executive, President Duterte said the Philippines
will continue to use coal in power generation but will implement new
technologies to minimize emissions.
“At this time, whoever is the
president of the Philippines would always contend with coal. There’s so much
coal still that can be utilized by civilization for the next 50 to 70 years,” Duterte said during
the inauguration of the coal-fired power plant in Misamis Oriental.
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